Tomatoville® Gardening Forums

Tomatoville® Gardening Forums (http://www.tomatoville.com/index.php)
-   Starting From Seed (http://www.tomatoville.com/forumdisplay.php?f=82)
-   -   Leaving Tomato Plants Out? (http://www.tomatoville.com/showthread.php?t=35382)

AlittleSalt March 7, 2015 12:42 PM

Leaving Tomato Plants Out?
 
The ideal time to plant out tomato plants for my area is supposed to be as early as Mid-March. Which got me to thinking about eventually leaving the plants outside at night while hardening them off.

This week, the snow and ice is finally over. Forecasted are highs in the 60s and lows from 40F tomorrow morning, and then warmer each morning after that. (45-50F)

At what overnight low temperature would it be safe for me to leave the tomato plants outside?

So far, they have never experienced temperature lower than 55F.

Worth1 March 7, 2015 01:02 PM

Anything above freezing, mine are planted right now in the garden.
If they dont freeze and die then it wont hurt them, I dont care what the experts say.
I also dont buy into the hardening off for cold weather either, you harden off for sunlight.

Worth

Blueaussi March 7, 2015 02:48 PM

I don't like to leave mine out until the nights are no lower than 50F. One or two nights in the upper 40's is ok, but if it's getting that cool at night, the soil will still be too cool anyway. I always take the soil temperature at the depth I plan to plant, and I want it to be at least 50F, too.

This is more important for peppers than tomatoes, but I would still rather hold off a week or so and let the soil warm up. Cold soil, especially if it's wet, is an invitation to disease. Containers warm up faster then the ground, but I would still check the soil temperatures and plan hardening off accordingly.

BriAnDaren March 7, 2015 02:54 PM

Last year, tomatoes did fine in our hoop house when temperature dropped to +2.4 C overnight.

Worth1 March 7, 2015 03:40 PM

[QUOTE=Blueaussi;455429]I don't like to leave mine out until the nights are no lower than 50F. One or two nights in the upper 40's is ok, but if it's getting that cool at night, the soil will still be too cool anyway. I always take the soil temperature at the depth I plan to plant, and I want it to be at least 50F, too.

This is more important for peppers than tomatoes, but I would still rather hold off a week or so and let the soil warm up. Cold soil, especially if it's wet, is an invitation to disease. Containers warm up faster then the ground, but I would still check the soil temperatures and plan hardening off accordingly.[/QUOTE]


I just checked my soil temp at about 4 inches depth next to a tomato plant and it is 55.5 F.
This is after several days of cold weather and rain.
Today the sun came out around 12 noon.
The temperature in the shade is 62 F and the radiant heat from the sun on the soil is 105.6 F.

Warm enough for me.:D
Worth

AlittleSalt March 7, 2015 04:48 PM

Our ground temp at 6" is 50F. I'm planting potatoes finally. They needed to be in the ground a week ago, but I wasn't interested in standing on ice to do it.

Worth1 March 7, 2015 04:52 PM

[QUOTE=AlittleSalt;455447]Our ground temp at 6" is 50F. I'm planting potatoes finally. [COLOR=Red]They needed to be in the ground a week ago, but I wasn't interested in[/COLOR] [COLOR=Red]standing on ice to do it.[/COLOR][/QUOTE]

:)):)):)):))

drew51 March 7, 2015 06:35 PM

I like to wait till it's above 50F at night. yes they can survive, but in my experience the cold seems to stunt them. I have had plants I kept in outgrow the ones outside in the cold. Sure they will not die, just be stunted, and set back. Now in places with long seasons, that may not mean anything, but here the season has limts, and shocking your plants is not helpful, and delays harvest, thus reducing yields.


All times are GMT -4. The time now is 03:57 AM.


★ Tomatoville® is a registered trademark of Commerce Holdings, LLC ★ All Content ©2022 Commerce Holdings, LLC ★